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Parental migration, socioeconomic deprivation and hospital admissions in preschool children in England: national birth cohort study, 2008 to 2014
by
Cortina-Borja, Mario
, Salway, Sarah M.
, Lewis, Kate M.
, Nath, Selina
, Burns, Rachel
, Hardelid, Pia
, Macfarlane, Alison
, Villarroel-Williams, Nazmy
, Viner, Russell
, Saxena, Sonia
, Heilmann, Anja
in
Biomedicine
/ Birth Cohort
/ Child health
/ Child, Preschool
/ Children
/ Children of immigrants
/ Cohort analysis
/ Cohort Studies
/ Confidence intervals
/ Country of birth
/ Deprivation
/ Economic aspects
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency medical services
/ Emigration
/ Emigration and Immigration - statistics & numerical data
/ England - epidemiology
/ Female
/ Health aspects
/ Health services
/ Hospital admissions
/ Hospitalization - statistics & numerical data
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Infections
/ Male
/ Medical care
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Migration
/ Multiple births
/ Parenting
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Patient admissions
/ Preschool children
/ Psychological aspects
/ Registration
/ Regression analysis
/ Regression models
/ Research Article
/ Social aspects
/ Social Deprivation
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Socioeconomics
/ Statistical analysis
/ Statistical methods
/ United Kingdom
/ Utilization
2024
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Parental migration, socioeconomic deprivation and hospital admissions in preschool children in England: national birth cohort study, 2008 to 2014
by
Cortina-Borja, Mario
, Salway, Sarah M.
, Lewis, Kate M.
, Nath, Selina
, Burns, Rachel
, Hardelid, Pia
, Macfarlane, Alison
, Villarroel-Williams, Nazmy
, Viner, Russell
, Saxena, Sonia
, Heilmann, Anja
in
Biomedicine
/ Birth Cohort
/ Child health
/ Child, Preschool
/ Children
/ Children of immigrants
/ Cohort analysis
/ Cohort Studies
/ Confidence intervals
/ Country of birth
/ Deprivation
/ Economic aspects
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency medical services
/ Emigration
/ Emigration and Immigration - statistics & numerical data
/ England - epidemiology
/ Female
/ Health aspects
/ Health services
/ Hospital admissions
/ Hospitalization - statistics & numerical data
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Infections
/ Male
/ Medical care
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Migration
/ Multiple births
/ Parenting
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Patient admissions
/ Preschool children
/ Psychological aspects
/ Registration
/ Regression analysis
/ Regression models
/ Research Article
/ Social aspects
/ Social Deprivation
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Socioeconomics
/ Statistical analysis
/ Statistical methods
/ United Kingdom
/ Utilization
2024
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Parental migration, socioeconomic deprivation and hospital admissions in preschool children in England: national birth cohort study, 2008 to 2014
by
Cortina-Borja, Mario
, Salway, Sarah M.
, Lewis, Kate M.
, Nath, Selina
, Burns, Rachel
, Hardelid, Pia
, Macfarlane, Alison
, Villarroel-Williams, Nazmy
, Viner, Russell
, Saxena, Sonia
, Heilmann, Anja
in
Biomedicine
/ Birth Cohort
/ Child health
/ Child, Preschool
/ Children
/ Children of immigrants
/ Cohort analysis
/ Cohort Studies
/ Confidence intervals
/ Country of birth
/ Deprivation
/ Economic aspects
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency medical services
/ Emigration
/ Emigration and Immigration - statistics & numerical data
/ England - epidemiology
/ Female
/ Health aspects
/ Health services
/ Hospital admissions
/ Hospitalization - statistics & numerical data
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Infections
/ Male
/ Medical care
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Migration
/ Multiple births
/ Parenting
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Patient admissions
/ Preschool children
/ Psychological aspects
/ Registration
/ Regression analysis
/ Regression models
/ Research Article
/ Social aspects
/ Social Deprivation
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Socioeconomics
/ Statistical analysis
/ Statistical methods
/ United Kingdom
/ Utilization
2024
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Parental migration, socioeconomic deprivation and hospital admissions in preschool children in England: national birth cohort study, 2008 to 2014
Journal Article
Parental migration, socioeconomic deprivation and hospital admissions in preschool children in England: national birth cohort study, 2008 to 2014
2024
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Overview
Background
A third of children born in England have at least one parent born outside the United Kingdom (UK), yet family migration history is infrequently studied as a social determinant of child health. We describe rates of hospital admissions in children aged up to 5 years by parental migration and socioeconomic group.
Methods
Birth registrations linked to Hospital Episode Statistics were used to derive a cohort of 4,174,596 children born in state-funded hospitals in England between 2008 and 2014, with follow-up until age 5 years. We looked at eight maternal regions of birth, maternal country of birth for the 6 most populous groups and parental migration status for the mother and second parent (UK-born/non-UK-born). We used Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) quintiles to indicate socioeconomic deprivation. We fitted negative binomial/Poisson regression models to model associations between parental migration groups and the risk of hospital admissions, including interactions with IMD group.
Results
Overall, children whose parents were both born abroad had lower emergency admission rates than children with parents both born in the UK. Children of UK-born (73.6% of the cohort) mothers had the highest rates of emergency admissions (171.6 per 1000 child-years, 95% confidence interval (CI) 171.4–171.9), followed by South Asia-born mothers (155.9 per 1000, 95% CI 155.1–156.7). The high rates estimated in the South Asia group were driven by children of women born in Pakistan (186.8 per 1000, 95% CI 185.4–188.2). A socioeconomic gradient in emergency admissions was present across all maternal regions of birth groups, but most pronounced among children of UK-born mothers (incidence rate ratio 1.43, 95% CI 1.42–1.44, high vs. low IMD group). Patterns of planned admissions followed a similar socioeconomic gradient and were highest among children with mothers born in Middle East and North Africa, and South Asia.
Conclusions
Overall, we found the highest emergency admission rates among children of UK-born parents from the most deprived backgrounds. However, patterns differed when decomposing maternal place of birth and admission reason, highlighting the importance of a nuanced approach to research on migration and health.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
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